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® 




Europaisches Patentamt 
European Patent Office 
Office europeen des brevets 



0 Publication number: 



0 366 41 1 

A2 



EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION 



@ Application number: 89310945.4 


(sy Int. CI. 5 : UUor ZDO/UO , //(wUor^oo/UD, 


210:06) 


@ Date of filing: 24.10.89 


® Priority: 28.10.88 US 264485 


© Applicant: EXXON CHEMICAL PATENTS INC. 


200 Park Avenue 


© Date of publication of application: 


Florham Park New Jersey 07932(US) 


HO ft<; QH RnMotin Qfl/lft 
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(72) invpntor* Kresae. Edward Nathan 




V°j/ UooiyilaloU oui ill auiiny olcuco. 


68 Parlin Lane 


AT BE CH DE ES FR GB GR IT LI LU NL SE 


Watchung New Jersey 07060(US) 




Inventor: Datta, Sudhin 




30 Briarwood Drive 




Matawan New Jersey 07747(US) 




Inventor: Lohse, David John 




556 Stoney Brook Drive 




Bridgewater New Jersey 08807(US) 




© Representative: Dew, Melvyn John et al 




Exxon Chemical Limited Exxon Chemical 




Technology Centre P.O. Box 1 




Abingdon Oxfordshire, OX13 6BB(GB) 



0 Graft polymers of ethylene-propylene-diene monomer polymers with propylene, means of 
preparation, and use of polypropylene compositions. 

(st) Graft polymer comprising an ethylene-propylene-diene monomer polymer having polypropylene grafted 
thereto at one or more of the diene monomer sites, the process for making the graft polymer comprising the 
sequential use of two different Ziegler-Natta catalyst systems, the use of the graft polymer for improving the 
impact properties of polypropylene compositions, and improved polypropylene blends. 



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EP 0 366 411 A2 



GRAFT POLYMERS OF ETHYLENE-PROPYLENE-DIENE MONOMER POLYMERS WITH PROPYLENE, MEANS 
OF PREPARATION, AND USE IN POLYPROPYLENE COMPOSITIONS 



Field of the Invention 

This invention relates to improved thermoplastic compositions. In other aspects it relates to graft 
polymers comprising an ethylene-propyiene-diene monomer polymer having polypropylene grafted thereto 
5 at one or more of the diene monomer sites, to the process for making the graft polymer comprising the 
sequential use of two different Ziegler-Natta catalyst systems, and to the use of the graft polymer for 
improving the impact properties of polypropylene compositions. 

w Background Information 

Isotactic polypropylene is known to be one of the lightest major plastics. Yet, because of its high 
crystallinity, it is known to possess high tensile strength, stiffness and hardness. These characteristics allow 
finished materials made thereof to have good gloss and high resistance to marring. Further, its high melting 
75 point allows it to be subjected to elevated temperatures without loss of high tensile strength. However, 
because of the restriction of molecular motion characteristic of isotactic polypropylene brittle behavior takes 
place not far below room temperature and its poor low temperature impact strength limits its usefulness. 

Different ways of improving the impact strength of the polypropylene at low temperatures without 
unacceptable adverse effect on its other properties, including its flexurai rigidity and thermal resistance 
20 have been proposed. 

U.S. Patent No. 4,113,802, MATTEOLI et al M is directed to a process for producing polypropylene- 
based compositions with high impact strength by first polymerizing propylene in the presence of a catalyst 
such as TiCl3, and then adding ethylene or a mixture of ethylene and propylene and continuing the 
polymerization. 

25 U.S. Patent No. 4,128,606 FURUTACHl et al. is directed to preparation of impact-resistant poly- 
propylene composition by first polymerizing propylene in the presence of a titanium-based catalyst and an 
organoaluminum compound; polymerizing propylene and ethylene in the presence of the foregoing reaction 
mix; and, in the presence of the reaction mix thus obtained, polymerizing either ethylene or both ethylene 
and propylene. 

30 The usefulness of certain ethylene-alpha-otefin elastomeric polymers, generally referred to as ethylene- 
propylene rubber ("EPR"), for improving the impact strength of polypropylene ("PP") plastic compositions 
is known. The improvement may be generally accomplished through producing a simple physical mixture of 
PP with EPR. 

For example, Japanese Patent No. 19934/67 is directed to producing shock-resistant polypropylene by 
35 adding an elastomer solution, which may be ethylene-propylene rubber, to polypropylene. 

U.S. Patent No. 4,087,485, HUFF, is directed to improving the impact strength of a polypropylene 
composition by incorporating therein minor amounts of polyethylene and ethylene-propylene copolymer. 

As this literature exemplifies it is recognized that two or more polymers may be blended together to 
form a wide variety of random or structured morphologies to obtain products that potentially offer desirable 
40 combinations of characteristics. However, it may be difficult or impossible in practice to achieve many 
potential combinations through simple blending because of some inherent and fundamental problems. 
Frequently, the two polymers are thermodynamically immiscible, which precludes generating a truly 
homogenous product. This may not be a problem per se since often it is desirable to have a two-phase 
structure. However, the situation at the interface between these two phases very often does lead to 
45 problems. The typical case is one of high interfacial tension and poor adhesion between the two. This 
interfacial tension contributes, along with high viscosities, to the inherent difficulty of imparting the desired 
degree of dispersion to random mixtures and to their subsequent lack of stability giving rise to gross 
separation or stratification during later processing or use. Poor adhesion leads, in part, to the very weak and 
brittle mechanical behavior often observed in dispersed blends and may render some highly structured 
so morphologies impossible. 

The word "compatibility" has a technological usage in the polymer industry which refers to whether an 
immiscible polymer blend tends to form a stable dispersion, one less subject to problems of gross 
separation or stratification. A "compatibiiizer" is a polymer that has the characteristics or properties 
permitting it to stabilize, or "compatibilize", a heterophase polymer blend. 

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It is generally known that the presence of certain polymeric species, usually block or graft copolymers 
suitably chosen, may serve as effective compatibilizers. This is believed to occur because of a preferential 
location of the compatibilizer at the interface of the phases in a blend. This preferential location most likely 
occurs as a result of entanglement of respective segments of the compatibilizer in the phases to which the 

5 segments are similar in chemical characteristics. This increases the adhesion between the phases and as a 
result of reduced surface energy between the phases better dispersion is permitted. The improved 
dispersion is observable directly by microscopic investigation of domain size of the dispersed phase. It has 
been suggested that ideally the compatibilizer component should be a block or graft with different segments 
that are chemically identical to those in the respective phases. 

10 Certain polymer blends have previously been utilized with compatibilizers. U.S. Patent No. 4,299,931 is 
directed to compatibiiized polymer blends, wherein a blend of an olefin polymer and nitrile rubber is 
compatibilized by the addition of a block copolymer of the olefin polymer and the nitrile rubber. 

U.S. Patent No. 4,410,482 discloses the formation of a graft copolymer of nylon and polyethylene as 
part of a blend of nylon and polyethylene. The presence of the graft copolymer is said to have a dramatic 

rs effect on the properties of the blends (in this case, its permeability) which can be related to its function as a 
compatibilizer. 

Likewise U.S. Patent No. 4,264,747 discloses compatibilizing a blend of styrene acrylonitriie resins with 
styrene-ethylene-butylene-styrene (SEBS) block copolymer where the SEBS copolymer has been made 
compatible with the styrene acrylonitriie resin by forming a graft copolymer compatibilizer by grafting a 

20 polar monomer which may be the styrene acrylonitriie resin onto the SEBS backbone. 

U.S. Patent 3,739,042 discloses block copolymers prepared by first polymerizing an olefin or diolefin, or 
combinations thereof, for example, amorphous ethylene-propylene or ethylene-propylene-cyclopentadiene, 
in the presence of an appropriate anionic catalyst to form a first block, then polymerizing thereto at the still 
"living" catalytic site monomers which polymerize by a free radical mechanism, for example, acrylonitriie, 

25 styrene, etc. The block polymers of this invention are said to possess the unique ability to render dissimilar 
polymers compatible in one another. The linear block copolymers of this invention are further characterized 
by the fact that the anionically polymerized block obtained from alpha-olefins is normally substantially 
crystalline, i.e., it has a degree of crystallinity of at least 25%. 

Despite the above knowledge in the art, a truly effective compatibilizer for blends of isotactic- 

30 polypropylene ("i-PP") plastic compositions with EPR has not been available to the public or industry prior 
to the invention described herein and that described in co-pending companion case Attorney's Docket E- 
123. The prior art block polymers all suffer to varying degrees the problem that where a single catalyst 
system is utilized the different segments will have characteristics arising from the catalyst system chosen 
and not necessarily the characteristics of the blend polymers with which utilized. Thus where i-PP is 

35 necessarily polymerized with catalyst systems yielding stereo-specific polymers having the crystalline 
structure necessary for plastics, EPR is typically polymerized utilizing catalyst systems yielding substan- 
tially amorphous, random copolymers. Clearly the general goal of achieving chemical identity between 
compatibilizer segments and respective polymers in an EPR/i-PP blend is not met when a single stereo- 
specific catalyst system is used for both i-PP and random EPR segments. 

40 The graft polymers of this invention comprising random EPR having substantially crystalline poly- 
propylene grafted thereto at one or more diene monomer sites are believed to be unknown prior to the 
disclosure herein. 

Various methods have been developed for preparing the prior art block polymers having polymer 
segments differing from one another in composition. 

45 European Patent No. 83-949-A discloses a thermoplastic block copolymer comprising one or more 
crystalline propylene blocks and one or more alkane - propylene blocks, in at least one of which diene units 
are present (constituting an "EPDM" block). The polymer is prepared by first polymerizing propylene, then 
polymerizing an EPDM and finally polymerizing propylene or ethylene. The process relates to the formation 
of substantially crystalline polypropylene and specifies the use of known high-stereo-specific catalyst 

so systems, exemplifying only TiCl 3 -containing components. Dienes which are disclosed to be suitable in the 
preparation of the EPDM block include norbornadiene, dicyciopentadiene, tricyclopentadiene, 5-ethylidene 
norbornene -2, 5-methylene-norbornene-2 f 5 vinylnorbornene -1, and 5- (2-propenylnorbomene -2). 

Japanese Patent 69/19,542 discloses a method for preparing propylene/ethylene block copolymers 
comprising carrying out polymerization using a stereo-specific catalyst in a manner to achieve specific 

55 ratios of A and B blocks. The A block can be a propylene homoblock and the B block can be an 
ethylene/propylene copolymer where the length of the B block can be regulated by the addition of a diene 
hydrocarbon. Suitable dienes included 1 ,5-cyclopentadiene. The catalyst exemplified comprises TiCI 3 . 
Japanese 69/20,751 contains a similar disclosure wherein propylene is polymerized alone, then propylene 



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and 1-7 -octadiene and finally ethylene alone. 

U.S. Patent 3,454,675 discloses a method of preparing block polymers of mono -1 olefins using two 
reactors. The reactors are compartmented to prevent short circuiting of the catalyst in the first reactor which 
results in a short residence time for some of the catalyst in the first reactor. A first mono -1- olefin is 

s polymerized in the first reactor, the polymer and its catalyst is transferred to the second reactor and the 
second mono 1- olefin is copolymerized therein. In one embodiment the reaction mixture of the first reactor 
is stripped of unreacted first mono -1- olefin before transferring it to the second reactor in order to achieve 
pure block polymer. In another embodiment the unreacted monomer is transferred with polymer and 
catalyst to the second reactor. The result is a mixed block copolymer that can comprise a polypropylene 

w segment and an ethylene-propylene copolymer segment. Catalyst systems are based on transition metal 
halides of titanium, zirconium, hafnium or germanium, TlCk is preferred. 

U.S. Patent No. 3,268,624 discloses a method for preparing a two segment block copolymer of ethylene 
and propylene which comprises first polymerizing a feed comprising propylene and propylene with a small 
amount of ethylene using a catalyst comprising titanium trichloride, an alkyaluminum dihaiide, and an alkoxy 

75 silane. After the polymerization has proceeded for the desired length of time the first (propylene) feed is 
discontinued and a second feed of ethylene or ethylene with a small amount of propylene is fed to the 
reactor. A single reactor is used and the polymer contains no unsaturation. 

U.S. Patent No. 3,301,921 discloses a composition of matter comprising a highly isotactic poly- 
propylene polymer chain, uninterrupted by ethylene, having attached thereto, at one end, an ethylene- 

20 propylene copolymer. The process for forming the composition of the invention utilizes catalyst and 
operation conditions selected to produce stereo-specific polymers. The ethylene content of the block 
polymer is about 1 to 20 wt % while the ethylene content of the ethylene-propylene segment is about 10 to 
90 wt %. The product is said to have improved impact resistance over polypropylene alone. The propylene 
polymerization is carried out to about 90 to 95% of the desired propylene conversion. Either the 

25 polypropylene or the ethylene-propylene copolymer can be produced first, in both cases the first polymer- 
ized monomer(s) are contacted with a stereo-specific catalyst with- subsequent addition of the second 
monomer(s) to the reaction mix. The catalyst used is TiCI 3 with aluminum aikyl or aluminum alkyl halides. 
U.S. Patent 3,318,976 discloses and claims the process for preparing the product, claimed in the '921 
patent. Both patents are continuation-in-part applications based on the same earlier filed application (S.N. 

30 77,776 filed December 22, 1960). 

Ziegler-Natta catalysis is capable of producing highly isotactic therefore highly crystalline polymers and 
in addition can polymerize a wide range of monomers including ethylene and propylene. Additionally 
Ziegler-Natta catalysis can be utilized to produce random, elastomeric polymers from the same readily 
available monomers. However this method of catalysis results in polymers with a very short life making 

35 sequential polymerization of crystalline and random polymer segments difficult or impossible. A method 
was sought therefore that could utilize the benefits of Ziegler-Natta polymerization to produce a polymer 
composition having both crystalline polypropylene segments and highly random, substantially amorphous 
EPR segments to serve as both a compatibilizer for polypropylene/EPR blends and a i-PP impact strength 
improver. 

40 

Objects of the Invention 

Accordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a graft polymer of polypropylene and EPR that is 
45 useful in the field of thermoplastic compositions. More specifically, it is an object of this invention to provide 
graft polymers of i-PP and EPR where the respective segments retain the stereo-specific characteristics of 
substantial crystallinity in the PP segment(s) and a large degree of randomness in the EPR segment(s) and 
a process for preparing them. Another object of the invention is to provide compositions of i-PP, particularly 
those blended with EPR, that exhibit improved properties, including impact strength, gained by the inclusion 
so of the graft polymer of this invention. It is a further object of this invention to provide a method for 
compatibilizing blends of i-PP and EPR by utilizing compatibilizer polymers having segments chemically 
similar to the blends in which used. And yet another object of this invention is to provide a method for using 
graft polymers of i-PP and EP to improve the properties of alpha-olefin copolymer compositions and blends 
utilized as plastics, thermoplastics, elastomers and combinations thereof. 

55 

Summary of the Invention 



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The present invention is broadly directed to a polymer composition comprising ethylene-alpha-olefin- 
diene monomer polymer having polypropylene grafted thereto at one or more of the diene monomer sites, 
or more specifically, to ethylene-propylene-diene monomer polymer grafted with isotactic polypropylene, it 
is further directed to a process for preparing a graft polymer broadly comprising the steps of: 

5 A) combining under polymerization conditions ethylene, one or more alpha olefin monomers, and one 

or more diene monomers in the presence of a non-stereospecific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for 
its capability for producing random polymers; 

B) combining under polymerization conditions a polymer composition prepared In accordance with 
step A) and propylene in the presence of a stereo-specific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for its 

w capability for producing isotactic polypropylene. 

The invention is further directed to blends and compatibilized blends of polymers comprising at least 
polypropylene and graft polymers comprised of ethylene-aipha-olefin-diene monomer polymers having 
polypropylene grafted thereto at one or more of the diene monomer sites, and optionally, ethylene- 
propylene rubber. And accordingly, it is directed to a method for compatibilizing a blend of ethylene- 

75 propylene rubber and isotactic polypropylene utilizing graft polymers comprised of ethylene-alpha-olefin- 
diene monomer polymers having polypropylene grafted thereto at one or more of the diene monomer sites. 



Brief Description of the Drawings 

FIG. 1 is a microphotograph showing the domain size of an 80%/20% by weight blend of PP/EP in a. 
and a 72/18/10 by weight blend of PP/EP/graft polymer of this invention in b. The graft copolymer is an 
ethylene/propylene/vinyl norbornene terpolymer (44.5/52.7/2.8 wt.%) composition having individual chains 
thereof grafted with isotactic-polypropylene. 

Detailed Description of the Invention 



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35 



The Graft Polymer 

The graft polymer of this invention is a polymer comprising an ethyiene-alpha-olefin-diene monomer 
polymer with polypropylene grafted thereto at one or more of the diene monomer sites. The structure of this 
graft polymer may be illustrated in one embodiment as: 

— (EP) DM (EP) DM (EP) DM (EP)— 

i-PP i-PP i-PP 



where "EP" is ethylene-propylene random segments, "DM" is diene monomer, and "i-PP" is isotactic 
polypropylene. This graft polymer preferably has a structure directed to optimizing its use as a com- 
patibilizer in PP/EPR blends and accordingly will preferably have constituent segments that resemble the 
blend components as closely as possible in terms of molecular weight, crystallinity and, for the ethylene- 
alpha-olefin-diene monomer polymer, compositional distribution of monomers. The terms EPR (ethylene- 
propylene rubber) and ethylene-alpha-olefin-diene monomer polymer ("EPDM") as used herein with respect 
to both EPR in blends and block polymers and the pre-graft EPDM of this invention are both meant to be 
inclusive of copolymers (for EPR), terpolymers, tetrapolymers, etc., (for both EPR and EPDM). Thus the 
pre-graft EPDM will comprise ethylene, one or more alpha-oiefins, and one or more diene monomers, will 
be substantially amorphous, and will have a substantially random arrangement of at least the ethylene and 
the alpha-olefin monomers. 

The EPDM, prior to grafting with polypropylene, will generally have a molecular weight range 
approximately equivalent to that of any of the EPR components useful in PP/EPR blends, preferably, 
approximately equivalent to that of the specific EPR component in the blend. Typically this will be between 
about 5,000 and up to about 1,000,000 or higher, more typically between about 10,000 and 500,000, and 
even more typically between about 15,000 and 350,000, where the molecular weight is weight-average 
("M w "). 

Furthermore, the molecular weights of the EPDM segments of the backbone, that is, between propylene 



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grafts or extensions from the grafting diene monomer site, is likewise selected such that it matches the 
molecular weight of the EP in the blend. 

Typically EPR is "substantially amorphous", and when that term is based to define the EPDM segment 
or segments it is to be taken to mean having a degree of crystallinity less than 25%, preferably less than 

5 about 15%, and more preferably less than about 10% as measured by means known in the art. The three 
major known methods of determining crystallinity are based on specific volume, x-ray diffraction, and 
infrared spectroscopy. Another well-established method, based on measurement of heat content as a 
function of temperature through the fusion range, is now easily carried out using differential scanning 
caiorimetric measurements. It is known that these independent techniques lead to good experimental 

70 agreement. 

Additionally, it is known in the art that the tendency of a particular combination of catalyst system and 
monomers to produce "blocky", random, or alternating polymers can be characterized by the product of the 
reactivity ratios defined for the given monomers under the specific reaction conditions encountered. If this 
product is equal to 1.0, the sequence distribution will be perfectly random; the more the product is less than 

15 1.0, the more the monomers will approach alternating sequence; and, the more the product is greater than 
1.0, the more the monomers will tend to have a "blocky" sequence distribution. Generally speaking, the 
segments of a polymer which crystallize are linear segments which have a number of identical (both by 
chemical make-up and stereo-specific orientation) units in a row. A combination of such segments are said 
to yield "blocky" polymer. If there is little or no such sequential order within the segments making up a 

20 polymer chain, that chain will be very unlikely to conform itself into the correct shape to fit into the spatial 
order of a crystal and will accordingly exhibit a low degree of crystallinity, The EPDM portion of the graft 
polymer of this invention accordingly has a reactivity ratio product less than 2.0, preferably less than about 
1 .5, and more preferably less than about 1 .25. 

The EPDM will contain about 20 to about 90 weight percent ethylene, preferably about 30 to 85 weight 

25 percent ethylene, and even more preferably about 35 to about 80 weight percent ethylene. 

Alpha-olefins suitable for use in the preparation of the EPDM, and in general for EPR, are preferably 
C3-C16 alpha-olefins. Illustrative non-limiting examples of such alpha-olefins are propylene, 1-butene, 1- 
pentene, 1-hexene, 1-octene, and 1-dodecene, with propylene being principally preferred. The alpha-olefin 
content of the EPDM and EPR is generally about 10 to about 80 weight percent, preferably about 15 to 

30 about 70 weight percent. As indicated above the choice of alpha-olefin, or alpha-olefins, preferably will 
follow that of the alpha-olefin(s) in the EPR though a selection that differs within the examples given above 
will still be useful for the purposes of this invention. 

The ethylene/propylene ratio of the backbone is also preferably closely matched to the ratio of ethylene 
to propylene in the EPR of the blend. At the very least the composition of the backbone is such that it is 

35 miscible with the component of the blend. This ratio can generally be expected to be on the order of about 
1 :4 to about 9:1 . 

The diene monomers useful in this invention consist of two groupings. The first grouping comprises 
diene monomers conventionally used in known EPDM polymers and the second comprises a select group 
of diene monomers which contain two non-conjugated sites of ethylenic unsaturation which are of unequal 

40 reactivity with respect to Ziegler-Natta polymerization. The conventionally used diene monomers 
(hereinafter, "known DM's") are generally selected from the easily polymerizable non-conjugated dienes 
and can be straight chain, branched chain or cyclic hydrocarbon di-olefins or cycloalkenyl substituted 
alkenes, having about 6 to about 15 carbon atoms. Illustrative non-limiting examples of particular non- 
conjugated diene monomers suitable for use in this group are: 

45 A. straight chain acyclic dienes such as 1 ,4-hexadiene and 1,6-octadiene. 

B. branched chain acyclic dienes such as 5-methyl-1, 4-hexadiene; 3,7-dimethyl-1 , 6- octadiene; 3,7- 
dimethyl-1, 7-octadiene and the mixed isomers of dihydromyricene and dihydro-ocinene; 

C. single ring alicyclic dienes such as 1 ,3-cyclopentadiene; 1 ,4-cyclohexadiene; 1 ,5-cycIo-octadiene 
and 1 ,5-cyclododecadiene; 

50 D. multi-ring alicyclic fused and bridged ring dienes such as tetrahydroindene, methyl tetrahydroin- 

dene, dicyclopentadiene; bicyclo-(2,2,1)- hepta-2, 5-diene; alkenyl, alkylidene, cycloalkenyl and cycloal- 
kylidene norbornenes such as 5-methylene-2-norbornene, 5-ethylidene-2-norbornene, 5-isopropylidene-2- 
norbornene, 5-(4-cyclopentenyi, -2norbornene, and 5-cyclohexylidene-2-norbornene; and 

E. cycloalkenyi-substituted alkenes., such as ally! cyclohexene, vinyl cyclooctene, ally! cyclodecene, 

55 vinyl cyclododecene. 

Of these known DM's, the preferred dienes are dicyclopentadiene, 1 ,4-hexadiene, 5-methylene-2- 
norbornene, and 5-ethylidene-2-norbornene. Particularly preferred dienes are 5-ethylidene-2-norbornene and 
1 ,4-hexadiene. The total known DM's content in the EPDM can be from 0 to about 15 weight percent, 

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preferably 0.5 to about 12 weight percent, and most preferably about 1.0 to about 6.0 weight percent. 

The second group diene monomers are critical to this invention and are preferably those which contain 
two non- conjugated sites of ethylenic unsaturation which are of unequal reactivity with respect to Ziegler- 
Natta polymerization (hereinafter, "unequally reactive DM's"). By unequal reactivity it is defined here that 
one site of unsaturation, or double bond, is readily polymerizable with catalyst systems utilized convention- 
ally to prepare EPR while not being readily polymerized by catalyst systems utilized conventionally to 
prepare i-PP. The other site of unsaturation will be readily polymerizable with i-PP catalysts but not so 
much with EPR catalysts. The determination of whether a given site of unsaturation is readily polymerizable 
with specific catalyst systems is conventionally determined by comparing the rate of conversion of 
monomers in a polymerization reaction into the polymer product. Rates of conversion are measured, as 
known in the art, by, for example, feeding known weight percent amounts of the selected monomers in 
solvent into a standard continuous-flow stirred tank reactor along with the catalyst/co-catalyst system, and 
analyzing the weight percent monomer content (again in solvent) of the resulting polymer product. The rate 
of conversion is the weight percent of the monomer in the polymer product to the weight percent of the 
monomer in the initial feed stream. Ethylene content is determined conveniently by methods described in 
ASTM D3900, diene monomer content is determined conveniently by refractive index methods as described 
in I. J. Gardner and G. VerStrate, Rubber Chem, Tech. , 46, 1019 (1973). 

Thus the most preferred unequally reactive DM's are those having a double bond internally incor- 
porated in a norbornyl bicyciic configuration and one double bond in a terminal exocyclic position, in this 
case the norbornyl double bond will polymerize readily in a conventional EPR polymerization reaction while 
the exocyclic double bond will not. The terminal exocyclic double bond will instead readily polymerize in an 
i-PP polymerization. Though hydrocarbon compounds having equally reactive sites of unsaturation, for 
example the alpha-omega diolefins such as 1 ,5-hexadiene or the bicyciic diolefins such as norbornadiene, 
may be useful in accordance with this invention, the equal reactivity will permit of the crosslinking of some 
of the polymer chains formed and will require additional separation steps to isolate the graft copolymers of 
this invention. 

The preferred unequally reactive DM's then are represented by the following structural representation: 



where R D is hydrocarbyl and linear, branched, or cyclic, and may include one or more sites of unsaturation 
internal to a cyclic structure, and may contain from 0 to about 20 carbon atoms. Further, the -R D -C = C 
substituent may be incorporated at any position shown above as numbers 1-7, so long as that position does 
not also contain the norbornyl unsaturation, illustrated above between positions 5 and 6. Specific preferred 
unequally reactive DM's include the alkyl-substituted norbornenes, of which 5-vinyl-2-norbornene and 5-(3 - 
butenyl)-2-norbomene are most preferred. Furthermore, the norbornyl compounds represented in the 
structural representation above can also be alkylated with, for example, C1-C+ alkyls at one or more of the 
carbon atoms in any of the positions not part of the norbornyl unsaturation and not having the R D -C = C 
substituent without departing from the scope of this invention. 

The unequally reactive DM's are preferably incorporated in the EPDM in an amount ranging from about 
0.1 to about 6 wt.% of the EPDM, most preferably ranging from about 0.5 to about 3 wt.%. 

The polypropylene graft segment or segments will preferably resemble in molecular weight and 
crystallinity the polypropylene component or compound with which the graft polymer of this invention may 
be blended. Thus, the molecular weight of the polypropylene segment(s) is between 1/3 and 3 times that of 
the blend polypropylene and is most preferably equal. While an ideal match is preferred, "mismatched" 
weights will be useful to some extent and are considered within the scope of the invention. Thus the 
polypropylene segment(s) will have molecular weights of about 10,000 up to about 10,000,000, or higher, 
preferably about 50,000 to about 300,000 M w . While molecular weights lower than that of the blend 
polypropylene will have some effect, the effects will decrease as molecular weight decreases. Generally 
speaking there is little effect for i-PP below its "entanglement molecular weight" which is that weight at 
which there is little incorporation of the PP segment of the graft polymer into the PP matrix and 




EP0 366 411 A2 



effectiveness as a compatibilizer is substantially diminished. This lower limit is about 10,000 M w . 

The crystallinity, or tacticity, of the polypropylene is preferably roughly equivalent to that of the matrix 
in which used (which will vary by end use) and accordingly may vary from being substantially amorphous to 
being completely crystalline, that is from about 0-100% crystallinity. Most typically, because of the 

5 extensive commercial use of isotactic polypropylene, both the graft polypropylene and the matrix poly- 
propylene will be substantially crystalline, e.g., greater than about 90%. Generally, the PP does not contain 
any ethylene. However, under certain circumstances small amounts of ethylene, on the order of less than 
about 5% by weight, may be incorporated. This may occur naturally since a small amount of unreacted 
ethylene from a first polymerization of the EPDM may be present in a second polymerization of the 

m polypropylene. This unreacted ethylene will almost necessarily be incorporated into the polypropylene. 
Furthermore, in certain instances the polypropylene plastics making up the bulk of the polymer blends for 
which this invention is useful contain small amounts of ethylene in copolymers known as "reactor 
copolymers". Thus, it is within the scope of the invention that the graft polypropylene contain minor 
amounts of ethylene, both as part of ethylene-propylene segments and as polyethylene segments. As a 

rs general rule, the tacticity of the polypropylene arms is similar enough to that of the propylene in the blend 
so as to have the arms co-crystallize with the blend component - most preferably the tacticity of the 
polypropylene is substantially equivalent. 

20 Preparation of the Graft Polymer 

The process for preparing the graft polymer of this invention broadly comprises the steps of: 

A) combining under polymerization conditions ethylene, one or more alpha olefin monomers, and one 
or more diene monomers in the presence of a non-stereospecific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for 

25 its capability for producing random copolymers; 

B) combining under polymerization conditions a polymer prepared in accordance with step A) and 
propylene in the presence of a stereo-specific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for its capability for 
producing isotactic polypropylene. 

Both steps A) and B) are generally practiced in accordance with current knowledge in the art relating to 

30 the coordination catalysis of alpha-olefins as developed from the early work of both Karl Ziegler and Giulio 
Natta. In the first step a random, amorphous EPDM polymer having the characteristics described above is 
prepared in a suitable reaction vessel and is then combined in the same or another suitable reaction vessel 
for the graft-polymerization of polypropylene. As has been surprisingly discovered, by selection of 
appropriate diene monomers for incorporation in the EPDM and by use of a non-stereospecific coordination- 

35 catalyst system, followed by subsequent polymerization of propylene in the presence of the EPDM thus 
formed and a stereospecific catalyst system, the graft polymer of this invention results. 

Though one clear example of the sequential process of this invention would involve the use of two 
continuous flow stirred tank reactors ("CFSTR"), each operated under conditions appropriate to the type 
polymerization being conducted, the use of more than one CFSTR for either or both steps will be useful in 

40 accordance with this invention. Similarly, the preparation of the EPDM in a gas phase process for 
subsequent introduction into a propylene polymerization environment is contemplated. Of more limited 
usefulness, but still appropriate, would be the addition of the EPDM precursor monomers and catalyst 
systems into a batch reactor with the subsequent addition of the propylene and its catalyst systems after 
substantially all of the initial EPDM polymerization has proceeded to completion. A preferred means of 

45 accomplishing the process of this invention is the use of one or more tubular reactors, either independently 
or in combination with one or more of the reaction vessels and procedures disclosed herein. For example, 
as with the batch reactor, addition initially of the materials necessary for the EPDM polymerization into a 
tubular reactor, with subsequent addition into the same reactor of materials necessary for the propylene 
graft-polymerization at a predetermined distance down the length of the reactor, can be used to prepare the 

so product of the invention. The predetermined distance will be that at which the ethylene and diene 
monomers have been substantially exhausted by incorporation into the EPDM. The use of a tubular reactor 
as adapted from the disclosure of U.S. Patent 4,540,753 is appropriate, the disclosure therein is expressly 
incorporated by reference. 

In order to achieve a close match between the molecular weight of the graft polymer EPDM segment or 

55 segments and the EPR in the final polymer blend, process parameters can be adjusted. In particular, by 
adjusting the unequally reactive DM feed relative to other monomer feeds the unequally reactive DM 
content can be adjusted to incorporate a range of graft sites appropriate to the EPR molecular weight ratios. 
For example, if the molecular weight ratio of the EPDM of this invention to EPR is 4/1 (e.g., 120,000/ 



8 



EP 0 366 41 1 A2 



30,000), the unequally reactive DM's will be incorporated in an amount to allow approximately 3 poly- 
propylene graftings, which will statistically be roughly evenly spaced yielding 4 EP-segments of a similar 
weight to the EPR of the blend. 

Alternatively, in a batch, series CFSTR or tubular reactor, the unequally reactive DM's can be added in 
the described amounts towards the completion of the EP(DM) polymerization process. Since each such 
process can be performed such that the majority of the EPDM polymer has been formed of only ethylene 
and propylene units, the unequally reactive DM's will be incorporated towards one end. Upon subsequent 
polypropylene graft polymerization, the graft or grafts will occur only towards one end of the EPDM polymer 
leaving an ungrafted EP segment that is formed so as to have a molecular weight approximately that of the 
EPR in the final polymer blend. 

This invention is discussed and claimed in terms of the EPDM polymer being prepared first for 
subsequent grafting polymerization with propylene to form the graft polymer of this invention, however, it 
will be obvious to those skilled in the art that the unequally reactive DM's may be incorporated first in a 
polypropylene polymerization process to yield a polypropylene backbone having minor amounts of diene 
monomer with available unsaturation for subsequent incorporation of one or more EPDM grafts. Though 
such a method is contemplated within the scope of this invention, it is less preferred since the substantial 
crystallinity of the most preferred polypropylene segments will render them substantially insoluble in the 
diluents typically used for the subsequent EPDM polyerization. 

For the preparation of the pre-graft EPDM, any of the non-stereospecific Ziegler-Natta catalyst systems 
useful for preparing substantially amorphous, random ethylene-propylene polymers will be appropriate. 
Such systems broadly include organic and inorganic components of the transition metals of Group 4A to 8A 
of the Mendeleyev Periodic Table of the Elements. Particularly useful are the halides, oxyhalides, esters, 
acetyl acetonates, etc., of the metals Vanadium, Zirconium and Hafnium. As is well known in the art, these 
are utilized with cocatalyst organoaluminum compounds, organoaluminum halides, mixtures, etc. The 
systems may be utilized in solvent, slurry or gas-phase processes and may be supported on inert supports, 
such as silicon dioxide, silica gel, or metal oxides or chlorides of zinc, magnesium, etc. Also as known, 
prepolymers may be formed as supports for these catalyst systems. Catalyst activators or promoters, 
molecular weight regulators, Lewis-base electron donors all may be utilized as disclosed in the art. 

More particularly, in carrying out the process of this invention, the preferred catalyst non-stereospecific 
Ziegler-Natta systems, are those that exhibit a differential polymerization activity with the monomers used 
such that the rate of conversion of ethylene and the diene monomers are approximately equal yet greater 
than the rate of conversion of propylene, which is equal to or greater than the rate of conversion of other 
selected alpha-olefins. Such preferred catalyst systems are based on vanadium compounds which have a 
vanadium valence of at least 3, and which are soluble in the polymerization diluent; preferably the vanadium 
catalyst is VX* or an oxyvanadium compound of the general formula VOX n (OR ) 3 . n where n is an integer of 
2 or 3, r' is a hydrocarbyl radical and X is halogen, preferably chlorine or bromine. Preferably R is Ci- C10 
alkyl, phenyl or benzyl, more preferably r' is Ci - C* alkyl, e. g. , methyl, ethyl or butyl. VCU and VOCI 3 are 
particularly useful in this EPDM polymerization. Additionally preferred as soluble vanadium compounds are 
the vanadium salts of beta-diketonates having the general formula of V(0~0)3 where 0-0 represents the 
diketonate anion, e.g., vanadium-tris (2,4-pentanedionate). 

The preferred cocatalysts utilized to prepare an appropriate active catalyst species are the alkyl 
aluminums and alkyl aluminum halides. A particularly preferred cocatalyst is an aluminum compound such 
as AlaR'aXa or AIR" b x' 3 .b, wherein R" is a hydrocarbyl moiety, X is halogen and b is 1 to 2. While the 
halogen can be chlorine, bromine or iodine, the preferred halogen is chlorine. The hydrocarbyl moiety can 
be a C1-C20 alkyl, cycloalkyl or aromatic group. Preferably R" is C1-C10 alkyl or cycloalkyl, phenyl or 
benzyl. Most preferably r" are methyl, ethyl, n-propyl, iso-butyl, hexyl, cyclohexyl, phenyl or mixtures 
thereof. In its preferred embodiment the aluminum compound is a dialkyl aluminum halide or alkyl 
aluminum sesquihalide. More preferably the aluminum compound is diethyl aluminum chloride ("DEAC") or 
ethyl aluminum sesquichloride ("EASC"). In utilizing the catalyst system of this invention the vanadium 
compound and aluminum compound can be utilized at a AIA/ mole ratio of about 1 to about 40, preferably 
about 2 to about 20, more preferably- about 3 to about 10, e.g., 5 to about 10. 

While a wide range of diluents are known to. be suitable for EPDM polymerization and thus suitable for 
the purposes of this invention, the diluent is preferably an organic compound which is a solvent for the 
monomers and polymers as well as the vanadium compound. Typically such diluents include aliphatic, 
aromatic and cycloalphatic diluents, hexan& and toluene are representative. 

The polymerization reaction can be conducted at a gage pressure of about 0 KPa to about 3000 KPa 
and at any temperature suitable for Ziegler polymerization reactions. The preferred pressure range for 
carrying out the EPDM polymerization is about 100 to about 1500 KPa, more preferably about 100 to about 



9 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



3000 KPa. The polymerization is preferably carried out at about -20° C to about 150° C, more preferably 
about 10° C to about 100° C, most preferably about 15° C to about 60° C. 

It is within the scope of this invention to incorporate hydrogen as a feed stream to moderate polymer 
molecular weight as known in the art. The hydrogen is added at about 0 to about 30 mole percent based on 
5 the total monomer. 

Additionally it is within the scope of this invention to incorporate "branch suppressors" during the 
EPDM polymerization to reduce branching, it is known in the art that certain Lewis bases, e.g., NH 3 , are 
effective as branch suppressors. Additionally certain alkoxy silanes, e.g., methyl silicate ( SKOMe)*), ethyl 
silicate Si(OEt)*). etc., have been recently discovered to act as effective branch suppressors without 

10 reducing catalyst efficiency or reactivity. The particular amount of suppressor required to suppress 
branching will depend on the nature of the suppressor, the diolefin, the catalyst system, the Al/V ratio and 
the polymerization conditions. Generally about 0.02 to 2.5 moles of suppressor to moles of aluminum can 
be used; preferably about 0.04 to 0.5 mol/mol are used. The use of excessive amounts of siiicates will 
result in reduced catalyst activity. The silicate concentration can also be expressed in terms of Si/V mole 

rs ratio and can vary from about 0.1 to about 3.0; preferably about 0.3 to about 2.0; more preferably about 0.6 
to about 1 .5, e.g.,. about 0.4 to about 1 .0. 

The vanadium and aluminum compounds can be added to the reactor either separately or premixed 
with one another. The silicates, optionally used as branching suppressors, should be added to the reactor 
separately and not in combination with any of the catalyst components in order to avoid reaction with the 

20 catalyst components and an alteration of their poiyerization characteristics. 

The extent of grafting of polypropylene onto the EPDM backbone, i.e., the number of graft segments on 
the backbone, is dependent on several factors. The major factors are both diene content of the backbone 
and the reactivity of the remaining double bond under the specific propylene polymerization conditions. 
Under normal propylene polymerization conditions, the lesser the diene content, the less grafting will occur. 

25 However, with too little diene content, a greater number of backbone EPDM polymers will pass through the 
propylene polymerization step without being grafted. One PP graft per EPDM is thought to be optimal, more 
than about four grafts per backbone, and higher, will increasingly result in less effectiveness as a 
compatibilizer. However, even in the event of some EPDM not being grafted, that EPDM will not have a 
deleterious effect on the final blend but as known in the art will contribute some impact improving 

30 characteristics to the blend. As indicated above the diene monomer content in the EPDM will range from 
about 0.1 to about 6 wt% of the EPDM, most preferably ranging from about 0.5 to about 3 wt.%. 

Polymerization conditions for the grafting of the propylene onto the EPDM are those conventionally 
used for the preparation of polypropylene. As is well known in the art, propylene can be polymerized into 
isotactic polypropylene in the presence of stereo-specific Ziegler-Natta catalyst systems comprising 

35 compounds of the transition metals of Groups 4 to 6 and 8 of the Periodic Table of elements, preferably 
titanium compounds, most preferably titanium halides, and organometallic compounds of elements of 
groups 1 to 3 of the Periodic Table, especially aluminum alkyls or aluminum alkyl halides. Illustrative 
examples include titanium trichloride, titanium tetrachloride, triethylaluminum and diethyl aluminum chloride. 
These transition metal catalyst systems can be non-supported or supported, for example silica gel, or metal 

40 oxides and dihalides, such as MgO, MgCb, ZnCb, etc. Such systems can be reacted together and can be 
complexed with a variety of Lewis-base electron donors. Such procedures and components are only 
illustrative of the knowledge in the art with respect to polypropylene polymerization, any are contemplated 
as useful within the scope of the invention. The polymerization reaction is preferably conducted according 
to the slurry method employing an inert hydrocarbon diluent or liquid propylene as the vehicle. It will be 

45 particularly useful in accordance with this invention that the hydrocarbon diluent utilized in the EPDM 
polymerization step and still carrying the EPDM polymer products, typically hexane, be the reaction diluent 
in the propylene polymerization step. The polymerization temperature can be in the range of about 50° C. to 
about 100° C. and is preferably at a range or about 60° C. to about 80° C. The polymerization pressure can 
also vary over a wide range and is not particularly limited. The polymerization pressure can for example be 

so in the range from between atmospheric pressure to 3.7 x 10 3 KPa. 

The graft-polymerization process of the invention is effective in the amount of true graft polymers 
produced as opposed to straight or ungrafted EPDM/EP and polypropylene, with typically 10 to 90% of the 
EPDM subjected to the subsequent propylene polymerization step having polypropylene grafted thereto. 
For purposes of the invention directed to producing a compatibilizer product, the product should have at 

55 least 10 wt.% graft copolymer, preferably at least 30 wt.%, and most preferably 40 wt.% and greater. For 
purposes of the invention of producing a compatibilized polypropylene blend in situ considerably less graft 
polymer content need be achieved. As little as 0.1 wt.% of the graft polymer in polypropylene will be of 
some effect, with amounts of from 5 to 10 wt.% being most preferred. The in situ process for producing a 



10 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



compatibilized blend of this invention comprises adjusting the ratio of the feed amounts of the EPDM 
polymer to the propylene in the polypropylene polyerization step. 



5 Polypropylene Blend Compositions 

The polypropylenes useful in the blends of the invention are normally solid isotactic polypropylenes, 
i.e., polypropylenes of greater than 90% hot heptane insolubles, having a melt flow rate (MFR) of from 
about 0.5 to about 30 g/10 minutes (230° C., 2160 g load). The particular density of the polypropylene is not 

to critical. As known, such isotactic polypropylenes are normally crystalline and have densities ranging from 
about 0.89 to about 0.93 g/cc. Preferably, a polypropylene having a melt flow rate within the range of from 
about 1.0 to about 20 is employed. Moreover, the blends of the invention can include more than one 
polypropylene component, i.e., several polypropylenes having different melt flow rates, whereby the 
resulting blends have melt flow rates within the above ranges. Further, these polypropylenes include reactor 

75 copolymers of polypropylene (RCPP) which can contain about 1 to about 20 wt.% ethylene or an alpha 
olefin comonomer of 4 to 16 carbon atoms. The RCPP can be either a random or block copolymer. The 
density of RCPP can be about 0.80 to about 0.91 g/cc. 

Methods for preparation of these propylene polymers are well known in the art. Generally, these 
polymer compositions can be prepared in the manner of the polypropylene segment of the graft polymer of 

20 this invention as described. For additional review of literature and patents in the art see "Olefin Polymers 
(Polypropylene)" in the Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3rd Edition v. 16, 453-469 (J. 
Wiley 8c Sons, 1981). 

The EPR of the blends of this invention are comprised of copolymerized monomers of ethylene, alpha- 
olefins, e.g., propylene, and, optimally, known DM's, e.g., 1 ,4-hexadiene, 5-ethylidene-2-norbornene, as 
25 more fully described above for the EPDM portion of the graft polymer of this invention. The molecular 
weight range of these ethylene-alpha-oiefin elastomeric polymers is that disclosed in the art and will 
typically range from about 5,000 to 1,000,000 weight average molecular weight (M w ), typically about 10,000 
to 500,000 M w , most typically about 15,000 to about 350,000 M w . Mooney viscosity (MLi +8 , 127 C.) will 
typically range from about 10 to about 90, more typically about 20 to about 75. 
30 EPR is prepared by procedures known in the art and more specifically described above for the EPDM 
of this invention. Examples of such commercially available copolymers are VISTALON®, elastomeric 
copolymers of ethylene and propylene alone or with 5-ethylidene, 2-norbornene, marketed by Exxon 
Chemical Company, Houston, Texas, and Nordel®, a copolymer of ethylene, propylene and 1 ,4-hexadiene, 
marketed by E. I. dupont de Nemours & Company, Wilmington, Delaware. 
35 These ethylene copolymers, terpolymers, tetrapolymers, etc., are readily prepared using soluble 
Ziegler-Natta catalyst compositions. For a review of the literature and patent art see: "Polyoiefin Elastomers 
Based on Ethylene and Propylene", by F. P. Baldwin and G. VerStrate in Rubber Chem. & Tech. Vol. 45, 
No. 3, 709-881 (1972) and "Polymer Chemistry of Synthetic Elastomers", edited by Kennedy and Tornqvist, 
Interscience, New York, 1969. For more recent review see: "Elastomers, Synthetic (Ethylene-Propylene)" by 
40 E. L Borg in Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 3d Ed., Vol. 8, 492-500 (Kirk-Othmer, 1979) and 
"Ethylene-Propylene Elastomers", by G. VerStrate in Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Engineering, 
Vol. 6, 2d Ed., 522-564 (J. Wiley & Sons, 1986). 

Suitable polymers may be prepared in either batch or continuous reactor systems, in gas phase, 
solution or slurry polymerizations. In particular, effective use can be made of a tubular reactor system to 
45 achieve novel molecular composition and molecular weight distribution in accordance with U.S. Patent 
4,540,753, which is incorporated herein by reference. In common with ail Ziegler-Natta polymerizations, 
monomers, solvents and catalyst components are dried and freed from moisture, oxygen or other 
constituents which are known to be harmful to the activity of the catalyst system. The feed tanks, lines and 
reactors may be protected by blanketing with an inert dry gas such as purified nitrogen. Chain propagation 
so retarders or stoppers, such as hydrogen and anhydrous hydrogen chloride, may be fed continuously or 
intermittently, to any but the tubular reactor of U.S. Patent 4,540,753, for the purpose of controlling the 
molecular weight and/or MWD within the desired limits. Additionally, as described above, it is known to 
incorporate "branch suppressors" such as certain Lewis Bases, e.g., NH 3 , and certain silicates, during the 
EPDM polymerization to reduce branching. 
55 The improved polypropylene compositions of the invention generally comprise from about 45% by 
weight to about 98% by weight polypropylene, from 0 to about 50% by weight ethylene-alpha-olefin 
elastomer, and from about 0.1% to about 20% by weight of the graft copolymer. More preferably, the 
impact blends of the invention have about 65 wt. % to about 90 wt. % polypropylene, about 8 wt.% to about 



11 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



30 wt.% ethylene-alpha-olefin, elastomer, and about 2 wt.% to about 15 wt.% graft polymer. Most 
preferably, the graft copolymer is incorporated at about 5 wt.% to about 10 wt.%, with the propylene and 
ethylene-alpha-olefin adjusted within the foregoing ranges. All weight percents are based on the total weight 
of the combined polymers making up the final impact blend composition. 

5 Generally the impact polypropylene blends of the invention can be prepared by mixing the graft 

polymer, elastomer and polypropylene components in any order and subjecting the the mixture to 
temperatures of, for example, 175° to about 210° C. Such mixing and heating can be accomplished using 
any conventional hot processing equipment in the art, such as a Banbury Mixer, a roll mill, a twin screw 
extruder, etc., employing known thermoplastic processing techniques. Additionally, by addition of curing 

w agents during this mixing and heating process, the EPDM of the graft polymer of the invention and the 
blend EPR can be partially crosslinked to form a cured thermoplastic/elastomeric composition. Such curing 
processes, the curing agents useful therein, and the appropriate amounts of curing agents needed to 
achieve appropriate curing levels are known in art, see, e.g., U.S. Patent 4,087,485, the disclosure of which 
incorporated herein by reference. Optionally, a masterbatch blending technique is employed wherein the 

is elastomer and graft copolymer are mixed with a portion of the polypropylene, e.g., at about 30 to about 50 
wt.% of the total weight of the masterbatch blend (for elastomer and graft components), and about 3 to 
about 12% of the total amount of polypropylene of the inventive impact blend and, subjected to the above- 
mentioned blending or curing conditions. This produces a melt-flowable thermoplastic elastomeric blend 
having a discontinuous elastomeric phase intimately dispersed in a continuous polypropylene phase, each 

20 phase having incorporated therein one or more of the respective similar segments of the graft polymer. This 
blend can then be pelletized for ease of handling. This masterbatch blend is then available for intimate 
mixing with homopolymer polypropylene at an elevated blending temperature at a desired ratio to produce 
the impact blend of the invention having the above-mentioned respective polymer components. 

For laboratory purposes a physical blend may be accomplished by dissolving the graft polymer in a 

25 suitable solvent, such as xylene, and then adding the EPR and PP compounds while stirring. The order of 
addition is unimportant. This is illustrated in the Examples, the results are generally equivalent but on a 
laboratory scale. 

As an alternate method of preparing the impact polypropylene blends of the invention the in situ 
process briefly described above may be utilized. By introducing the EPDM backbone previously formed, 

30 optionally with the elastomeric EPR component, into polypropylene polymerization conditions with an 
amount of propylene approximately equal to 4 to 1000 times by weight the amount desired to be graft 
polymerized onto the EPDM a reaction product comprising polypropylene blended with the graft polymer, 
and optionally EPR, is formed. This reaction product blend can then be blended with optional additional 
elastomer compounds in the manner described above to achieve the preferred improved impact blends of 

35 this invention. 

The compositions of this invention, as with other polypropylene impact blends known in the art, can 
contain stabilizers, antioxidants, processing aids, fillers, pigments, and other additives if desired, in normal 
and conventional amounts, depending upon the desired end use. The polypropylene blends of the invention 
can be used to produce films, filaments, rods, protective coatings, molded and extruded shaped articles, 
40 and the like, by procedures known in the art. 

The following examples more particularly illustrate the nature of the invention but are not intended to be 
limitative thereof. In the following examples, the mechanical property evaluations were made employing the 
following tests. 



TEST FOR 


VIA 


ASTM 


Impact Strength 


Notched Izod at room temp. 


D256, Method A 


Impact Strength 


Notched Izod at 0° C. temp. 


D256, Method A 


Impact Strength 


"Reversed" Notched Izod at -20° C. temp. 3 





a-This test was run with the notch away from the pendulum. 



55 

Example 1 



12 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



An EPDM containing 5-vinyl 2-norbornene (VNB), a compound commercially available from Aldrich 
Chemical Company, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was prepared in a continuous flow stirred tank reactor (CFSTR). 
A one liter CFSTR was operated at 35 'C and 500 KPa with continuous agitation at 1200 RPM. A feed 
stream comprising 3.37 Kg/hr. of hexane, 90.99 g/hr. of ethylene, 549 g/hr. of propylene and 3.38 g/hr. of 

5 VNB was continuously fed to the CFSTR. The catalyst system comprised VOCI 3 and EASC at an AIA/ molar 
ratio of 5. VOCI3 was added at 0.1348 g/hr. and EASC was added at 0.481 g/hr. Average residence time in 
the CFSTR was about 9.5 minutes. Hydrogen (300 ppm) was added to act as a chain transfer agent. An 
EPDM containing 44.52 wt.% ethylene, 52.68 wt.% propylene and 2.83 wt.% of VNB was produced. The 
product had a Mooney viscosity (M L , 1 +8, 100"C.) of 21.0 and a number-average molecular weight of 

10 about 30,000 as measured by gel permeation chromotography. IR film spectra of the polymer showed a 
band at 906 cm-1 indicating the incorporation of VNB. 

The EPDM-containing effluent from this reactor was scavenged free of vanadium catalyst residues by 
passage through a column of activated silica gel before being fed into a second reactor, this time a batch 
reactor. About 30g. of the EPDM in hexane was introduced along with the second catalyst system with heat 

75 being added to the system to increase the temperature to about 50° C. The catalyst was TiCI 3 , a 
commercial product available as "Stauffer AA" from Stauffer Chemical Company, Westport, Connecticut, 
and the co-catalyst was triethyl aluminum. About 2g of Stauffer AA was added; the molar ratio of aluminum 
to titanium was about 2.0. Gaseous propylene monomer was then added continuously over a period of 
about one-half hour until about 30g. of propylene had been added. About 3-4 mol. % of ethylene, based on 

20 the propylene amount, was introduced along with the EPDM, resufting in addition of about 1 gm of ethylene. 
The reaction mixture thus formed was stirred and allowed to react over a period of about 2 hours. 

The product formed was a graft polymer comprising the EPDM having polypropylene grafted thereto at 
one or more of the diene monomer sites. Product analysis showed a product weight of 57g. of which 70% 
was determined to be hexane extractable and 84% was determined to be heptane extractable by 

25 fractionation analysis. This showed the grafting of different M w polypropylene segments onto the EPDM. IR 
analysis of the 70%-hexane extractable product evidenced both the loss of vinyl double bonds in the 
EPDM, as seen from the depression of the 906 cm"" 1 peak in IR analysis, as well as addition of 
polypropylene as seen from IR absorption due to crystalline polypropylene. Also from IR analysis it was 
determined that 70% of the vinyl double bonds was incorporated., into the polypropylene segments thus 

30 formed. The appearance of normally insoluble polypropylene in the hexane solution would not occur if the 
polypropylene were not grafted to the normally soluble EPDM. 

A portion of graft copolymer formed above was dissolved in xylene. Approximately 97 wt. % was xylene 
soluble. The xylene-soluble fraction was solution blended with a commercial grade of EPM (Vistalon 457, 
Mooney Viscosity (1 +8, 127* C) of 25, 43 wt.% ethylene and 57 wt.% propylene) and a commercial grade 

35 of polypropylene (PP-5052, homopolymer with MFR of 1.2 g/10 min. and density 0.90 g/cm 3 ), both 
commercial products available from Exxon Chemical Company, Houston, Texas. The blend comprised 
72/18/10 parts by weight of PP/EPM/graft copolymer. The polymer was recovered from solution by pouring 
the solution into an excess of methanol at 2° C. The polymer was dried, recovered and vacuum molded into 
pellets. 

40 The pellets were microtomed in accordance with the procedures set forth in Polymer Microscopy , L C. 
Sawyer and D. T. Grobb, p. 85-92 (Chapman & Hall, 1987). The microtomed sections were extracted with 
hexane at room temperature to remove the EPM. A photomicrograph (Fig. lb) of the microtomed extracted 
sample was made. 

This procedure was repeated with an 80/20 blend of PP/EPM. The photomicrograph of this sample is 
45 shown in Figure la. The extracted EPM appears as holes in the dark background of polypropylene. As is 
readily apparent from a comparison of Figures la and lb, the EPM domains are much smaller in the blend 
with the graft copolymer. The average size of the domains is about 3 microns for the PP/EPM blend and 
about 0.3 microns for the PP/EPM/EPDM-g-PP blend. Hence the graft copolymer has acted to compatibilize 
the PP/EPM blend as evidenced by a decrease of about an order of magnitude in the size of EPM domains. 

50 

Example II 

The polymerization process of Example I was repeated using 5-(3'-butenyi 2 norbornene)("BNB") as 
55 the diene. A one liter CFSTR was operated at 35° C and 500 KPa with continuous agitation at 1200 RPM. A 
feed stream comprising 3.37 Kg/hr. of hexane, 75.8 g/hr. of ethylene, 472 g/hr. of propylene and 3.77 g/hr. 
of BNB was continuously fed to the CFSTR. The catalyst system comprising VOCI g and EASC at an AIA/ 
molar ratio of 10. VOCI3 was added at 0.1887 g/hr. and EASC was added at 0.676 g/hr. Additionally, NH 3 

13 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



was added to the reactor as a cationic branching suppressor at the rate of 2 moles of NH3 per mole of 
vanadium. Hydrogen (350 ppm) was added to act as a chain transfer agent. An EPDM containing 45.8 wt.% 
ethylene and 2.7 wt. % of BNB was produced at a continuous rate of about 139g/hr. IR film spectra of the 
polymer showed a band at 910 cm"* 1 indicating the incorporation of BNB. 

5 The effluent from this first CFSTR was fed into a 3.785 liter CFSTR to which 200g of propylene/hr. were 
added. The catalyst system was introduced as a hexane suspension and comprised a mixture of Stauffer 
AA and triethyl aluminum ("TEAL"). This system had an Ai/Ti ratio of 1/10. The catalyst feed rate was 
2.0g/hr. of Stauffer AA and 11.5 g/hr. of TEAL. The polymerization was conducted at 40° C and 217 g/hr. of 
graft copolymer was collected from the reactor effluent. 

ro Analysis of the polymer showed that the ethylene content was 38.0 wt.%. Film IR indicated (i) the 
added presence of isotactic polypropylene (i-PP) and (ii) diminished intensity for the 910 cm"" 1 alpha-olefin 
band, indicating incorporation of the remaining BNB exocyclic unsaturation into the i-PP segment. 



75 Evaluation 

As known in the art a principal purpose for preparing PP/EPM blends is to improve the impact 
resistance of the polypropylene. To test the effect of compatibilizing the blends on impact strength, blends 
of PP/EPM were prepared and the VNB graft copolymer of this invention (the polymer of Example 1) was 

20 added to the blend. In order to ensure good mixing, masterbatch blends having the compositions of 1) 1:2 
polypropylene to EPR and 2) 1:1.28:.71 of polypropylene to EPR to graft polymer were prepared using a 
CSI-MAX screwless extruder. The desired compositions as shown in Table I, (Sample Nos. 1 and 2) were 
prepared by blending additional polypropylene into the masterbatch blends utilizing the screwless extruder. 
The compatibilized blend comprised 7.7 wt.% of the graft copolymer of this invention. The results are 

25 shown in Table I. 

As is typical for PP/EPR blends no improvement in impact resistance at room temperature is observed. 
However, at temperatures which are at or below the glass transition temperature of polypropylene, there is a 
substantial improvement in impact strength as demonstrated in the Notched Izod test. The impact 
resistance for the compatibilized blend at 0°C was twice that of the PP/EPM blend, and at -20 °C the 
30 impact resistance was 39% higher. It is theorized that the improvement is a direct consequence of 
reduction in size of the EPM domains illustrated in Figure I. 

TABLE I 



IMPACT STRENGTH OF BLENDS WITH AND 


WITHOUT GRAFT COPOLYMER 




Sample No. 


1 


2 


Composition (wt %) 


Polypropylene-E15 


85.0 


78.3 


Vistalon 457 


15.0 


14.0 


(VNB-EPDM)-g-(PP) graft copolymer 




7.7 


Impact Strength (ft-lb/in.) 


Notched Izod, RT 


1.4 


1.3 


Notched Izod, 0°C 


0.3 


0.6 


"Reverse Notched Izod" at -20° C. 


5.4 


7.5 



50 

Although the invention has been described with reference to particular means, materials and embodi- 
ments it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the particulars disclosed and extends to all 
equivalents within the scope of the claims. 

55 

Claims 

1. A graft polymer comprising an ethylene-alpha-olefin-diene monomer polymer having polypropylene 



14 



EP 0 366 411 A2 



grafted thereto at at least one diene monomer site. 

2. The graft polymer of claim 1 wherein said alpha-olefin is propylene. 

3. The polymer of claim 1 or 2 wherein said polypropylene is Isotactic polypropylene. 

4. The polymer of claim 1, 2 or 3 wherein said diene^ monomer comprises at least one diene selected 
from the group consisting of 5-vinyl-2-norbomene and 5-(3 -butenyl)-2-norbornene. 

5. A polypropylene composition comprising polypropylene and a graft polymer according to any 
preceding claim. 

6. The polypropylene composition of claim 5 wherein both the polypropylene component and the 
polypropylene graft are substantially isotactic. 

7. The polypropylene composition of claim 5 or 6 additionally comprising an ethylene-propylene rubber 
composition. 

8. The polypropylene composition of claim 5, 6 or 7 comprising 0 to 50 wt. % said ethylene-propylene 
rubber, 45 to 98 wt. % said polypropylene, and 0.1 to 20 wt. % said graft polymer. 

9. A process for preparing a graft polymer comprising the steps of : 

A) combining under polymerization conditions ethylene, at least one alpha olefin monomer, and at 
least one diene monomer in the presence of a non-stereospecific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for 
its capability for producing random copolymers; 

B) combining under polymerization conditions a polymer prepared in accordance with step (A) and 
propylene in the presence of a stereo-specific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system selected for its capability for 
producing isotactic polypropylene. 

10. The process of claim 9 wherein said alpha olefin is at least one member of the group consisting of 
propylene and 1 -butene. 

11. The process of claim 9 or 10 wherein said at least one diene monomer is a diene monomer 
containing two non-conjugated sites of ethylenic unsaturation which are of unequal reactivity under Ziegler- 
Natta polymerization conditions. 

12. The process of claim 11 wherein said diene monomer is at least one member of the group 
consisting of 5-vinyl-2-norbomene and 5-(3 / -butenyl-2-norbornene. 

13. The process of claim 9, 10, 11 or 12 wherein the non-stereo-specific Ziegler-Natta catalyst system 
comprises a hydrocarbon soluble Vanadium salt and an aluminum alkyl and the stereo-specific Ziegler- 
Natta catalyst system comprises a titanium halide and at least one member of the group consis ting of alkyl 
aluminums and alkyl aluminum halides. 

14. The process of claim 9, 10, 11, 12 or 13 wherein the polymerization of step A) is carried out in at 
least one reaction vessel and the poiyer prepared in accordance with step A) is transferred to at least one 
reaction vessel where the polymerization of step B) is carried out 

15. The process of claim 9, 10, 11, 12 or 13 wherein the polymerizations of steps A) and B) are carried 
out in at least one tubular reactor. 



15 



EP 0 366 41 1 A2 

i '.St 11 > •» 

7 "J -» O 3 T :» 

3 3 »» -> ") 

■> -a -> 3 n * «» •» w» ^-t 




72/18/10 PP/EPR/ GRAFT COPOLYMER 

Morphology of Blends With and 
Without Graft Copolymer, 2000x. 

FIG.IB 

Neu Bir.rjQt&L-.i ' ""~ .ly filed 
Nouveiierrisni uepo.se 



Europaisches Patentamt 
European Patent Office 
Office europeen des brevets 



© Publication number: 



0 366 41 1 A3 



© 



EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION 



© Application number: 89310945.4 
© Date of filing: 24.10.89 



© int. CI. 5 : C08F 255/06, //(C08F255/06, 
210:06) 



® Priority: 28.10.88 US 264485 

© Date of publication of application: 

02.05.90 Bulletin 90/18 

© Designated Contracting States: 

AT BE CH DE ES FR GB GR IT LI LU NL SE 

© Date of deferred publication of the search report: 

24.04.91 Bulletin 91/17 



© Applicant: EXXON CHEMICAL PATENTS INC. 
200 Park Avenue 

Florham Park New Jersey 07932(US) 

@ Inventor: Kresge, Edward Nathan 
68 Pariin Lane 

Watchung New Jersey 07060(US) 

Inventor: Datta, Sudhin 

30 Briarwood Drive 

Matawan New Jersey 07747(US) 

Inventor: Lohse, David John 

556 Stoney Brook Drive 

Bridgewater New Jersey 08807(US) 



© Representative: Dew, Melvyn John et al 
Exxon Chemical Limited Exxon Chemical 
Technology Centre P.O. Box 1 
Abingdon Oxfordshire, OX13 6BB(GB) 



© Graft polymers of ethylene-propylene-diene monomer polymers with propylene, means of 
preparation, and use of polypropylene compositions. 



® Graft polymer comprising an ethylene- 
propylene-diene monomer polymer having poly- 
propylene grafted thereto at one or more of the 
diene monomer sites, the process for making the 
graft polymer comprising the sequential use of two 
different Ziegler-Natta catalyst systems, the use of 
the graft polymer for improving the impact properties 

f*) of polypropylene compositions, and improved poly- 

^ propylene blends. 



CO 
CO 
CO 



Q- 

III 



Xerox Copy Centre 



J 



European 
Patent Office 



EUROPEAN SEARCH 
REPORT 



Application Number 



EP 89 31 0945 



DOCUMENTS CONSIDERED TO BE RELEVANT 



Category 



Citation of document with indication, where appropriate, 
of relevant passages 



Relevant 
to claim 



CLASSIFICATION OF THE 
APPLICATION (int. CL5) 



EP-A-0 059 034 (SUMITOMO CHEMICAL CO., LTD) 

* Claims 1-6; page 1, line 13 - page 2, line 14; page 4, line 
17 - page 5, line 20; page 6, lines 8-21 * 

GB-A-1 090 838 (STAMICARBON N.V.) 

* Claims 1 ,4,5-8; page 2, lines 53-90 * 



1-4,12-14 



1-2,4,10, 
12-13 



C08 
F 255/06 



TECHNICAL FIELDS 
SEARCHED (Int. CI.5) 



C 08 F 



The present search report has been drawn up for all claims 



Place of search 



The Hague 



Date of completion of search 



01 February 91 



PERSSON E.K.C. 



CATEGORY OF CITED DOCUMENTS 
X : particularly relevant if taken alone 
Y : particularly relevant if combined with another 

document of the same catagory 
A: technological background 
O: non-written disclosure 
P : intermediate document 
T : theory or principle underlying the invention 



E : earlier patent document, but published on, or after 

the filing date 
D : document cited in the application 
L : document cited for other reasons 

& : member of the same patent family, corresponding 
document